We’ve all heard the expression “innovate or die.” But there are endless examples of companies that made cutting-edge ideas a priority, yet their can’t-miss products – and sometimes the businesses themselves – died untimely deaths anyway.
“People often don’t realize that a product can be smart and work well, and still fail when it hits the marketplace,” says Mayur Ramgir, president and CEO of Zonopact Inc., a software development firm that specializes in innovative business solutions.
Don’t get him wrong. Businesses that encourage employees to innovate have the right idea, says Ramgir, who also is the author of Unbarred Innovation: A Pathway to Greatest Discoveries. But they can’t assume their breakthroughs will succeed on merit alone. The development process must take even the tiniest possible customer pushback into consideration.
He says mistakes companies make include:
Ramgir urges innovators to think of their ideas like “a piece of a puzzle that has to be just the right shape – on all sides – to fit into people’s lives.”
“If your idea is too expensive, makes the user feel uncomfortable or makes others uncomfortable,” he says, “it may never succeed.”
Mayur Ramgir (www.mayurramgir.com) is an award-winning author, speaker, innovator and entrepreneur. Educated at Georgia Tech, MIT, Oxford and the University of Sussex, he currently serves as president and CEO of Boston-based Zonopact Inc. Ramgir’s book, Unbarred Innovation: A Pathway to Greatest Discoveries, was published in 2016.
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